113 Cal. 201 | Cal. | 1896
The Pacific Undertakers, a- corporation, filed a petition in the superior court for a writ of mandate commanding A. 0. Widber, treasurer of the city and county of San Francisco, to pay certain demands against said city and county amounting to eighty-three dollars and three cents, which had been regularly allowed and audited. The prayer of the petition was granted, and Widber appeals.
The demands were presented to the treasurer on June 26, 1893, and were for services rendered in burying indigent dead during the months of April and May, 1893; but the general fund of the treasury was entirely exhausted, and there was no money of the fiscal year ending June 30,1893, to pay said demands, and there has not since been any money of said fiscal year to pay the said demands. However, since the first day of July, 1893, there has been, and at the time of the filing of the petition there was, sufficient money of the income and revenue of subsequent fiscal years with which to pay said demands.
Respondent contends that the nature and character of the demands here sought to be enforced exempt them from the operation of the provision of section 18, article XI, of the state constitution, that no county, etc., shall “incur any indebtedness or liability, in any manner or for any purpose, exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for it for such year, without the assent” of the electors expressed at an election, etc., as construed in San Francisco Gas Co. v. Brickwedel, 62
The demands here involved arose out of a contract between the petitioner and the board of supervisors, by which the former was to bury the indigent dead for one year, commencing July 1, 1892, and ending June 30, 1893—the close of the fiscal year—at a certain sum for each burial. The contract was made after an advertisement for bids such as is required by law in the letting of contracts for services, goods, wares, etc., the petitioner being the lowest responsible bidder. By an act of the legislature of April 27, 1860 (Stats. 1860, p. 272), the board of supervisors wras given, among other powers, authority “ to allow and order paid out of the general fund such sums as are now due, or may become due, for burying the indigent dead.” By section 292 of the Penal Code the duty of burying the body of a deceased person is imposed on certain relations in an enumerated order, and if there be no such relation, then upon the coroner who held an inquest on the body, and, if there be no such coroner, then “upon the persons charged with the support of the poor in the locality in which the death occurs”; and, if all these “omit to act,” then upon the tenant or owner of the premises where the death occurred or the body is found. Section 293 provides that “every person” upon whom the duty rests who omits to perform it within a reasonable time is guilty of a misdemeanor, and is liable to the person who performs the duty in treble the expenses incurred by the latter in making the burial. And it is contended by petitioner that under these statutory provisions the demands here sought to be enforced are obligations imposed by law within the ruling of this court in Lewis v. Widber, 99 Cal. 412, and therefore not within the declaration made in San Francisco Gas Co. v. Brickwedel, supra, that “each year’s income and revenue must pay
The judgment appealed from is reversed.
Temple, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.